Binance Square

CASP

1,167 views
6 Discussing
LRCO
--
See original
Four companies received a MiCA license to operate in the EU.Four companies received a MiCA license to operate in the EU. The Dutch regulator issued a long-awaited Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) license to four companies. This will allow them to operate in all 27 countries of the European Union. Among the license holders are the cryptocurrency payment platform MoonPay, the digital asset management company BitStaete, the fintech company ZBD specializing in the Lightning Network, and the brokerage firm Hidden Road. This is stated in a report published on December 30 by the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM).

Four companies received a MiCA license to operate in the EU.

Four companies received a MiCA license to operate in the EU.

The Dutch regulator issued a long-awaited Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) license to four companies. This will allow them to operate in all 27 countries of the European Union.

Among the license holders are the cryptocurrency payment platform MoonPay, the digital asset management company BitStaete, the fintech company ZBD specializing in the Lightning Network, and the brokerage firm Hidden Road. This is stated in a report published on December 30 by the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM).
--
Bullish
🚀 Crypto Buzz Alert! 🚀 Today's most searched cryptocurrencies and their recent price movements: 1. Pi Network (PI): Currently priced at $1.39, with a 3.99% decrease in the last 24 hours. #pi $PEPE 2. Casper AI (CSPR): Currently priced at $0.01023, with a 2.5% increase in the last 24 hours. #CASP $ETH 3. Kekius Maximus (KEKIUS): Currently priced at $0.00005237, with a 6.45% increase in the last 24 hours. #KEKIUS # 4. Universal Blockchain (UBC): Currently priced at $0.15, with a 1.2% increase in the last 24 hours #UBC 5. Bitcoin (BTC): Currently priced at $42,500, with a 2% increase in the last 24 hours. #Bitcoin $BTC Stay informed and explore these trending coins!
🚀 Crypto Buzz Alert! 🚀

Today's most searched cryptocurrencies and their recent price movements:

1. Pi Network (PI): Currently priced at $1.39, with a 3.99% decrease in the last 24 hours. #pi $PEPE

2. Casper AI (CSPR): Currently priced at $0.01023, with a 2.5% increase in the last 24 hours.
#CASP $ETH

3. Kekius Maximus (KEKIUS): Currently priced at $0.00005237, with a 6.45% increase in the last 24 hours.
#KEKIUS #

4. Universal Blockchain (UBC): Currently priced at $0.15, with a 1.2% increase in the last 24 hours
#UBC

5. Bitcoin (BTC): Currently priced at $42,500, with a 2% increase in the last 24 hours.
#Bitcoin $BTC

Stay informed and explore these trending coins!
See original
"The EU declares war on anonymity: The crypto market is on the brink of major changes starting in 2027!"#EUPrivacyCoinBan Officially confirmed: The European Union is determined to end anonymity in the cryptocurrency market. The new Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR), which will come into effect in 2027, promises to be a turning point for the digital asset industry. 🔹The EU is not just considering the possibility of restrictions - it has officially approved widespread regulations that will have far-reaching consequences:

"The EU declares war on anonymity: The crypto market is on the brink of major changes starting in 2027!"

#EUPrivacyCoinBan Officially confirmed: The European Union is determined to end anonymity in the cryptocurrency market. The new Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR), which will come into effect in 2027, promises to be a turning point for the digital asset industry.
🔹The EU is not just considering the possibility of restrictions - it has officially approved widespread regulations that will have far-reaching consequences:
The End of Privacy, The Beginning of OrderThe cryptocurrency phenomenon did not erupt from the desire to create new financial instruments. It was never born in pursuit of more efficient markets, nor as a response to speculative greed — that came later. Its first breath was political, almost metaphysical: a decentralized inscription of resistance against the cartographies of surveillance, against institutions whose legitimacy was presumed rather than proven. In this sense, the earliest cryptocurrencies were not commodities, but confrontations — confrontations with the nature of authority, property, memory, and value. Privacy-preserving tools like Monero or Zcash were never mere “options” within this paradigm. They were not deviations, but intensifications. They took the foundational proposition of crypto — that transaction without mediation is not only possible but desirable — and gave it the radicalism it deserved. Not transparency, but discretion. Not identification, but autonomy. These tools were built not to hide crime, but to make the human condition slightly less decipherable to power. And that is precisely what makes them intolerable. By 2027, under the sweeping reforms of the European Union’s Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR), these expressions of cryptographic discretion will be rendered incompatible with legality. Anonymous accounts will be prohibited. Service providers will be forced to track, store, and disclose the identities of users. Any protocol or coin that allows obfuscation, privacy layering, or transaction mixing will be banned from European jurisdictions — not merely regulated, but erased. The justification is predictable: crime, terrorism, the black market, tax evasion. Yet the deeper function of such a regulation is not juridical but symbolic. It does not merely target bad actors. It seeks to transform the ontological status of crypto in Europe — from a technology of resistance into a domesticated extension of the banking system. That is not a marginal policy change. It is the burial of a dream. For Europe, this marks a philosophical rupture. It reveals a fundamental discomfort with ambiguity, with shadows, with what cannot be indexed. The continent that gave the world Kafka and Camus — where suspicion of authority was once the seed of literature, theory, revolt — now finds itself legislating against cryptographic uncertainty as if it were an existential threat. Privacy, once a right, becomes a liability. And crypto, once a frontier, becomes an institution in chains. This transformation will not go unnoticed in the culture that once flourished around it. The European crypto community — particularly the builders, the cypherpunks, the artists, the legal philosophers, the anarcho-technologists — will find themselves in a new position: not as contributors to innovation, but as witnesses to its suppression. We will see, in real time, the conversion of a vibrant, transgressive subculture into a regime of compliance. The galleries will become offices. The manifestos will become whitepapers. And the trustless architectures will be remade in the image of the very powers they once opposed. Yet history does not obey decrees. Hegemony, as Gramsci taught us, is never permanent — it must be maintained by consent, or by coercion. In banning the tools of economic discretion, the European Union does not eliminate the instinct that created them. It merely pushes it elsewhere. Perhaps into new protocols. Perhaps into new jurisdictions. Perhaps into silence, for a time. But the hunger for sovereignty — over one's data, one's money, one's memory — is not so easily extinguished. What remains, then, is not optimism, but clarity. Crypto in Europe will continue, but it will no longer speak the language of rebellion. It will speak the language of institutions, of permissions, of sanctioned innovation. Those who remember otherwise — who remember why this began — may find themselves in exile. Not geographical, but cultural. And still, they will build. #AMLR2027 #CryptoRegulation #CASP #MiCA

The End of Privacy, The Beginning of Order

The cryptocurrency phenomenon did not erupt from the desire to create new financial instruments. It was never born in pursuit of more efficient markets, nor as a response to speculative greed — that came later. Its first breath was political, almost metaphysical: a decentralized inscription of resistance against the cartographies of surveillance, against institutions whose legitimacy was presumed rather than proven. In this sense, the earliest cryptocurrencies were not commodities, but confrontations — confrontations with the nature of authority, property, memory, and value.
Privacy-preserving tools like Monero or Zcash were never mere “options” within this paradigm. They were not deviations, but intensifications. They took the foundational proposition of crypto — that transaction without mediation is not only possible but desirable — and gave it the radicalism it deserved. Not transparency, but discretion. Not identification, but autonomy. These tools were built not to hide crime, but to make the human condition slightly less decipherable to power. And that is precisely what makes them intolerable.
By 2027, under the sweeping reforms of the European Union’s Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR), these expressions of cryptographic discretion will be rendered incompatible with legality. Anonymous accounts will be prohibited. Service providers will be forced to track, store, and disclose the identities of users. Any protocol or coin that allows obfuscation, privacy layering, or transaction mixing will be banned from European jurisdictions — not merely regulated, but erased.
The justification is predictable: crime, terrorism, the black market, tax evasion. Yet the deeper function of such a regulation is not juridical but symbolic. It does not merely target bad actors. It seeks to transform the ontological status of crypto in Europe — from a technology of resistance into a domesticated extension of the banking system. That is not a marginal policy change. It is the burial of a dream.
For Europe, this marks a philosophical rupture. It reveals a fundamental discomfort with ambiguity, with shadows, with what cannot be indexed. The continent that gave the world Kafka and Camus — where suspicion of authority was once the seed of literature, theory, revolt — now finds itself legislating against cryptographic uncertainty as if it were an existential threat. Privacy, once a right, becomes a liability. And crypto, once a frontier, becomes an institution in chains.
This transformation will not go unnoticed in the culture that once flourished around it. The European crypto community — particularly the builders, the cypherpunks, the artists, the legal philosophers, the anarcho-technologists — will find themselves in a new position: not as contributors to innovation, but as witnesses to its suppression. We will see, in real time, the conversion of a vibrant, transgressive subculture into a regime of compliance. The galleries will become offices. The manifestos will become whitepapers. And the trustless architectures will be remade in the image of the very powers they once opposed.
Yet history does not obey decrees. Hegemony, as Gramsci taught us, is never permanent — it must be maintained by consent, or by coercion. In banning the tools of economic discretion, the European Union does not eliminate the instinct that created them. It merely pushes it elsewhere. Perhaps into new protocols. Perhaps into new jurisdictions. Perhaps into silence, for a time. But the hunger for sovereignty — over one's data, one's money, one's memory — is not so easily extinguished.
What remains, then, is not optimism, but clarity. Crypto in Europe will continue, but it will no longer speak the language of rebellion. It will speak the language of institutions, of permissions, of sanctioned innovation. Those who remember otherwise — who remember why this began — may find themselves in exile. Not geographical, but cultural.
And still, they will build.

#AMLR2027

#CryptoRegulation

#CASP

#MiCA
Google to Enforce MiCA Rules for Crypto Ads in Europe Starting April 23 #CryptoRegulation #GoogleAds #MiCA #CASP Beginning April 23, Google will implement a new advertising policy in Europe, requiring crypto exchanges and wallet providers to be licensed under the MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) framework or CASP (Crypto Asset Service Provider) regulations. According to a March 24 policy update, all crypto advertisers must also: • Comply with local legal requirements • Meet national-level restrictions beyond MiCA • Be certified by Google Legal experts call the move a potential “double-edged sword”—a step toward reducing ICO scams, but one that may still leave regulatory gaps in enforcement. This marks a significant shift in how crypto services will be promoted across Europe and could reshape the advertising landscape for the industry.
Google to Enforce MiCA Rules for Crypto Ads in Europe Starting April 23
#CryptoRegulation #GoogleAds #MiCA #CASP

Beginning April 23, Google will implement a new advertising policy in Europe, requiring crypto exchanges and wallet providers to be licensed under the MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) framework or CASP (Crypto Asset Service Provider) regulations.

According to a March 24 policy update, all crypto advertisers must also:
• Comply with local legal requirements
• Meet national-level restrictions beyond MiCA
• Be certified by Google

Legal experts call the move a potential “double-edged sword”—a step toward reducing ICO scams, but one that may still leave regulatory gaps in enforcement.

This marks a significant shift in how crypto services will be promoted across Europe and could reshape the advertising landscape for the industry.
See original
EU Set to 'Terminate' Anonymous Coins and Anonymous Crypto Accounts from 2027The European Union (EU) will officially ban all anonymous tokens such as Monero (XMR), Zcash (ZEC), and anonymous crypto accounts from 2027, as part of new anti-money laundering regulations (AMLR). This is a tough but not surprising move in the effort to tighten control over the EU's digital asset sector. Anonymous tokens and anonymous wallets will be removed According to Article 79 of the AMLR law published by the European Crypto Initiative (#EUCI ), financial institutions, banks, and cryptocurrency service providers (CASP) will not be allowed to hold anonymous accounts or process transactions related to coins with anonymity features. This applies not only to crypto but also extends to:

EU Set to 'Terminate' Anonymous Coins and Anonymous Crypto Accounts from 2027

The European Union (EU) will officially ban all anonymous tokens such as Monero (XMR), Zcash (ZEC), and anonymous crypto accounts from 2027, as part of new anti-money laundering regulations (AMLR). This is a tough but not surprising move in the effort to tighten control over the EU's digital asset sector.

Anonymous tokens and anonymous wallets will be removed

According to Article 79 of the AMLR law published by the European Crypto Initiative (#EUCI ), financial institutions, banks, and cryptocurrency service providers (CASP) will not be allowed to hold anonymous accounts or process transactions related to coins with anonymity features. This applies not only to crypto but also extends to:
Login to explore more contents
Explore the latest crypto news
⚡️ Be a part of the latests discussions in crypto
💬 Interact with your favorite creators
👍 Enjoy content that interests you
Email / Phone number